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13 answers

Yes! Peter had a mother-in-law. He was married.

Matthew 8:14, 15 says, "And Jesus, on coming into Peter’s house, saw his mother-in-law lying down and sick with fever. So he touched her hand, and the fever left her, and she got up and began ministering to him."

Meg M: That doesn't make any sense. Peter was married and the Catholic Church requires celibacy for priests and the Pope. That's like requiring that priests and the Pope ABSTAIN from fishing even though Peter was a fisherman.

adphllps: If the concern was that the church was becoming too worldly, why celibacy? Instead, why not an order that all priests, bishops, etc. must work for their living? It was good enough for tent maker Paul, physician Luke, and the other first-century Christian evangelizers.

2007-05-01 18:02:05 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Our church did not make sure this form of mission. The pope will be married, as can many monks. at the same time as purely cardinals were made pope for decades, the pope can surely be any male Catholic, even married ones, and there have been various in Church historic previous. If someone who's not the rank of bishop receives elected pope, although, then they're first ordained a bishop earlier formally turning out to be pope. monks may also marry. There are 24 rites of the Catholic Church, and easily one among them (the Latin/Roman ceremony) has the self-discipline of celibacy. that is, although, with the help of a recommendations the most common ceremony, and such countless do not surely study the life of alternative rites. If a married guy ought to be a clergyman, they might connect anybody of the different rites fairly. they're all both valid. also let me communicate about that the purely indication we've that Peter had a spouse develop into element out of his mom-in-regulation. This does element out that he did have a spouse, yet she would were deceased with the help of the time Jesus got here alongside for all all of us recognize.

2016-11-24 19:59:24 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Celibacy was recommended by St.Paul for those who could live that kind of life.

There was a problem in later centuries of Bishops thinking Bishoprics and church property should be hereditary. That is why celibacy was eventually imposed.



Today it would require a new way of thinking for Catholics to support a married priesthood and their families.

I am neutral on the subject, but I believe many Catholics who support married priest might wind up with their noses out of joint. You see the Catholic rectory is the home of the priests as well as the church offices. Many rectories are like grand central station. People feel they should see Father any time they want. I know of a former Episcopalian (married) who has become a Catholic priest. He told the other priest he noticed when he was visiting the parish rectory the intrusion they had to put up with and said a lot of Protestant ministers wouldn't. He became a Catholic priest without taking a vow of celibacy. He did not live in the rectory.


I know of a Presbyterian minister who objected to having the parsonage next door to the church because it interfered with his family's privacy.
Catholics aren't use to that at all.

2007-05-01 18:14:28 · answer #3 · answered by Shirley T 7 · 1 0

Unfortunately Peter was crucified upside down well before the miraculous conversion of Constantine and the numerous Councils held in Rome. It is believe that this Peter they claim to be the Rock of the ROMAN Catholic church was simply someone named Peter. The formation of the Catholic church took many centuries of arguing and heretic labeling as they tried desperately to iron out a hybrid gospel to appease Christians and Pagan religions into One State Religion. Catholic means universal.

Don't worry you will see a form of this with your own eyes in the New World Order, as a matter of fact its happening now.

2007-05-01 18:19:38 · answer #4 · answered by Minister Paul 3 · 1 0

Church leaders in the early Church, who became to be known as "Priests, were allowed to get married during the early days of the Church. The Catholic Church, first and foremost represented by the Pope, decided to change this later on. I am not sure of the exact date but it is between 600-1300 A.D.

2007-05-01 18:18:44 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

It will not be good for the business. They started as missionaries going from place to another spreading the words but they have to return what was spend to them by the church. If they get married, there will be more chances of only one priest to get rich with his family like the some non-Catholic preachers who are enjoying their mansions and luxurious cars taken from the contributions of the poor whose wealth is their only hope in life. If you can count how much wealth the Vatican has acquired from non-married priests you wwill amazed to find that their money is enough to feed the hungry of Africa and other Asian countries they have reached.

2007-05-01 18:12:58 · answer #6 · answered by Rallie Florencio C 7 · 1 1

Around the fourth century, bishops started handing their titles down to their sons, making the priesthood more like a aristocracy than holy order. Also, the bishops' families were amassing huge fortunes. The concern was that the church was becoming too worldly.
By papal bull (order) the priesthood was made celibate in order to combat this.

2007-05-01 18:20:00 · answer #7 · answered by adphllps 5 · 1 0

That's like asking, "If Peter was the first Pope, then why aren't all priests and Popes fishermen like he was?" or, "If Peter was the first Pope, then why aren't all priests and Popes Jewish like he was?"

Being married, being a fisherman, or being Jewish simply are not requisites.

2007-05-01 18:06:18 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 2 3

Peter was married before he met Christ. Celibacy came a little later in the priesthood as preferable in particular as an imitation of Christ. A wife and children can also be a distraction and unnecessary burden, dividing the attention from clerical duties.
Although it is not a general practice, some priests are married. A married man can become a priest in the Catholic church. He must seperate from his wife and remain celibate but the marriage remains.

2007-05-01 18:10:09 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 5

Peter never went to Rome.
Your statement is false Catholic teaching.

2007-05-01 19:40:04 · answer #10 · answered by repent 4 · 1 0

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